So now we are back to:
Judges 21:25
In those days there was no king in Israel: every man did that which was right in his own eyes.
And this verse:
Matthew 6:33
But seek ye first the kingdom of God, and his righteousness; and all these things shall be added unto you.
So again, are you saying this verse has NO practical application for today?!
The idea of Apostles is viewed with skepticism and almost dismissed out of hand... Prophets, the same. Do we accept there is any validity to the office of a Teacher or a Pastor?
Are we really reduced to Husbands as the only voice of God with authority; and that, only in his own house, and the church is every man for himself?
You and others have placed Paul (a man who killed Christians) now on such a pedestal, that no one today could ever operate as he did. If we cannot attain unto Paul, how will we ever attain unto Christ... and do even “greater works?”
The church has glorified the life of Paul, and distains the life of one who has never rebelled against the Gospel. We love Paul, and like Joseph’s brethren, despise Joseph. Will there never be any form of a Kingdom until Jesus returns? Well maybe, in the form of a family; but certainly not in the form of a ‘Body?’ What do we do with:
1 Cor. 12:28
And God hath set some in the church, first apostles, secondarily prophets, thirdly teachers, after that miracles, then gifts of healings, helps, governments, diversities of tongues.
Is there such a thing a “new revelation”? Technically, NO! All revelation comes from God. He knew all truth from the beginning. Do we know all truth yet? Can we say all truth is contained in our book? That’s crazy! The question might be, does the “Book” contain all the truth God wants us to know? Or, does God have some truth that is only reserved for certain people? Does not God want us all in (his body) included in:
Ephes. 4:12-13
For the perfecting of the saints, for the work of the ministry, for the edifying of the body of Christ: [13] Till we all come in the unity of the faith, and of the knowledge of the Son of God, unto a perfect man, unto the measure of the stature of the fulness of Christ:
John 16:12
I have yet many things to say unto you, but ye cannot bear them now.
1 Cor. 15:51
Behold, I shew you a mystery; We shall not all sleep, but we shall all be changed,
Paul is the one who revealed the concept of “rapture” ...the living being changed without death.
Is there more ‘church wide’ revelation to come? I hope so!! So far, most of what I see is disagreement over what has already been revealed. There is probably not one doctrine of the Church that is not contested in some way. We need “revelation” just to understand what has been revealed! I do not believe all of the “Many things” have been revealed yet! Don’t you still have some questions that have not been “revealed?” We say we believe the Scripture. How about:
Hebrews 13:8
Jesus Christ the same yesterday, and to day, and for ever.
Jesus placed His followers under the direction and leadership of Apostles. Why would He now go back to just Prophets, or just Teachers, or just Pastors, or just husbands?
The first Apostles had the ability to give “new??” (actually, just reveal things previously hidden) revelation to the Church.
Can you give Scripture why, or when, that process ceased? You obviously see flaws in the Catholic church. What, or who, gave them the authority to determine the cannon of scripture and to close it?
God’s preferred method of operation is a Kingdom. He can, and sometimes does, give direct instruction. Sometimes, He tests our faith and sends a messenger. Is that process over? Is not the husband still the messenger of God to his wife? Are not Parents supposed to be messengers of God to their children?
The truths of the Scripture are open for all; but are only by choice received. Any ‘new’ revelation, (i.e.: uncovering of truth not previously accepted, or known) might only be accepted by those who accepted the Apostle giving it. Peter indicated that the words of Paul were hard to understand. Peter may have struggled with some of them, himself. Peter did accept Paul’s gift.
When the church and the world went into the “Dark Ages,” it took over 1000 years for Martin Luther and others to make a strong enough case starting with “the just shall live by faith” to begin a movement strong enough to rival the domination of the Roman Church. No doubt, God always had the “7,000” who did not bow to Baal; but they had operated in the shadows, and we know little about them.
Luther received his revelation from the Spirit. It wasn’t being taught in his circles. Was Luther an Apostle? I do not know. He was probably at least called to the office of a Teacher. Was his revelation “new?” No! But it seemed ‘new’ to the established church. Did he challenge the established thinking of the day? Yes! As time progressed, the Protestant viewpoints were expanded and enlarged. Each idea seemed ‘new.’ Some clung to the ‘old’ when every ‘new’ idea was added to this new way of looking at truth. Were some of these reformers Apostles?? Maybe!
How did we of BF come to the understanding of PM? For some, they searched the Scripture and discovered truth! Was it ‘new truth??’ NO! Why was it revealed to them? It was in the realm of their domain as husbands and wives to make determinations concerning these things.
Every truth that has come to light since Luther has also been contaminated along the way, and rejected by some along the way: Baptism, Sanctification, Predestination, Eldership, the Pentecostal experience, the Positive Confession message, Prosperity teaching, Deliverance, Prophecy teachers, Hebrew roots / Messianic movement, the Kingdom message. Most who espouse these ideas have some truth to their message, but also some error. Each of these concepts has seen some rejection. Sometimes, because they saw some errors and chose to ‘play it safe,’ they reject the whole idea! Some have rejected ‘new’ ideas just because they were ‘new’ (actually, just different from what they had been taught.)
Jesus said:
Mark 7:13
Making the word of God of none effect through your tradition, which ye have delivered: and many such like things do ye.
We feel safe in the realm of tradition. They put buggy whips on cars for a while. Silly huh?
We at BF have broke with tradition to return to old truth! We should not be afraid of truth, whether new or old... if it is true. There are no ‘new’ revelations; there are just things, as of yet, we haven’t understood. Should the church at large embrace them? If they are true, they should. What is the source of truth? Jesus! Jesus is building a Kingdom! To honor and embrace that Kingdom is the fastest way to find truth!
We believe the “translation from life to immortality” will occur because Paul taught it. Was it ‘new’ revelation? ...or, just the revealing of something not seen before? The only reason we fear ‘new,’ or ‘more,’ truth is because we become vulnerable in the process.
Ever drive a standard shift car or truck? You start in 1st gear. Wheee! To go faster you must shift to second. That becomes scary, because you have to go to neutral, before you can go to second. Each time you advance in your understanding, you have to be willing to go to neutral. That is scary! What if you end up in neutral? What if you go to reverse by mistake? Better stay in first, or second gear; don’t take a chance... but is that God’s will for us as individuals, or as his Body, the Church?
Hebrews 6:1-3
Therefore leaving the principles of the doctrine of Christ, let us go on unto perfection; not laying again the foundation of repentance from dead works, and of faith toward God, [2] Of the doctrine of baptisms, and of laying on of hands, and of resurrection of the dead, and of eternal judgment. [3] And this will we do, if God permit.
In the concept of ‘new’ revelation, I do not believe it is new to God. I do not believe it will contradict a proper understanding of Scripture. There is a difference between doctrine and conduct. Are there things that are true that we, or the church, have not understood, yet? What we consider ‘new’ will first, eliminate error; second, enlarge our understanding of what we think we know; and at times introduce us... yes... to ideas we had not previously considered.
Zec, you have my book on the Kingdom. I implore you to read it... at least read the beginning sections on the principles of the Kingdom, and the section toward the end on Apostles. You earlier had asked to know more about a church that would accept PM. Because they accept the concepts of the Kingdom and my office as an Apostle, they were able to make the leap out of cultural bias smoothly and easier than otherwise.